The Festival of Insignificance

The Festival of Insignificance
English edition of The Festival of Insignificance
Author Milan Kundera
Original title La fête de l'insignifiance
Translator Linda Asher
Country Czechoslovakia
Language French
Genre Novel
Publisher Gallimard
Publication date
2013
Published in English
2015
Media type Print (Hardback and Paperback)
Pages 115
ISBN 0062356895

The Festival of Insignificance (French: La fête de l'insignifiance) is a novel by Milan Kundera. This is his eleventh fictional work. It is about a man named Alain, who has not seen his mother since his childhood; Ramon, an intellectual who has retired; D’Ardelo, a man who has a narcissistic personality; Charles and “Caliban” are two people who operate a catering firm; and Quaquelique is an old man who remains attracted to women.[1] Quaquelique manages to seduce women using his skill at non-stop talking. The novel is set in Paris. The themes include "the erotic potential; the link between mother and child; the procreative role of sex; angels...[,] navel gazing...and insignificance. [1] The novels' characters discuss the philosophical ideas of Hegel, Kant and Schopenhauer. The novel is made up of seven parts (an approach he also used in his novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being, among others, and representative of a structure he laid out in his book The Art of the Novel[2]). The theme of insignificance was also used in The Unbearable Lightness of Being. [1]

Reception

The Guardian stated that "...there’s something very appealing in the flavour and personality of this new short novel..."[3] The Guardian states that while "[p]erhaps the textures of the novel are thin, and perhaps it does seem to circle around some missing centre – of drive, or story. But then again, that’s part of the point: everything ends in Ramon’s hymn to insignificance, celebrating the life that doesn’t signify anything, the world that is just itself “in all its obviousness, all its innocence, in all its beauty”. And indeed this austere prose – with its elusive ironies, and aura of the 18th century – works beautifully, just as itself, in Linda Asher’s translation from the French."[3]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Leyla Sanai (2015-06-20). "The Festival of Insignificance, by Milan Kundera: charming in so many ways it's easy to forgive him for the flawed female characters". The Independent. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  2. Matthews, Katherine (2015-09-11). "You Review: The Festival of Insignificance – Milan Kundera". ABC Blog. Retrieved 2018-08-27.
  3. 1 2 Tessa Hadley. "The Festival of Insignificance by Milan Kundera review – funny and crisply elegant". The Guardian. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
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